Nature photography by Kevin Ebi

Dramatic nature photography that captures a Living Wilderness

Books by Nature Photographer Kevin Ebi

A field of wildflowers. Snow on a black-sand beach. Young ducklings on a log.

Our world is constantly changing. The number and type of wildflowers change day-to-day, year-to-year. Snow on the beach will soon melt or be washed away. The young ducklings will rapidly grow up and start families of their own.

Living Wilderness, a large-format, fine-art book, celebrates and illustrates this change with more than 140 vibrant images captured over a 15-year period.

Our Land, featuring more than 100 images of inspiring American parks, was introduced on the centennial of the U.S. National Park Service. The book includes Kevin Ebi's image Rainbow on Haleakala, which was featured on a U.S. Postal Service Forever stamp to honor the anniversary.

From the jewels of the National Park Service, like Yosemite and Yellowstone, to the lesser-known, like Theodore Roosevelt and King's Canyon, the book celebrates some of the most stunning natural wonders in America. Most of the images are unique to this volume and have not appeared in any of Kevin's other books.

While we know a bald eagle when we see one, most don't really know the bird. Many believe an eaglet is suddenly able to fly when its mother kicks it out of the nest.

In reality, the process is more like how human children learn to ride a bike. And the first flight is really just the beginning of a remarkable story that involves migrating up rivers in pursuit of spawning salmon, learning to read the body language of other eagles to recognize opportunities to steal food, and practicing hunting skills on fish trapped in oyster beds at low tides.

Year of the Eagle involved three years of detailed research at one nesting site, and more than a decade of photography in their wintering grounds.

The cycle takes it from the ocean, into the sky as part of a cloud, back down to Earth as rain or snow, and then back to the ocean in rivers or underground aquifers. Running in Circles traces a drop of water on this timeless journey where each cycle can take minutes or millenia.

The Wild Within is a collection of over 120 photographs that document the rich wildlife in the wetlands of the Washington Park Arboretum, in Seattle, Washington. Kevin Ebi is a featured photographer with several images in the book. The images are accompanied by essays and reflections from community members who are inspired by and care deeply for the wetlands.

Through the power of images and words, the aim of the book is to inspire and educate the public about the value of this extraordinary urban ecosystem and, as a result, help to preserve and protect it for the benefit of future generations.